From the DW:
“Germany assumes chair of
anti-Semitism alliance”
Leadership in a 34-nation
anti-Semitism campaign is about to pass to Germany, 75 years after the end of
World War II and the Holocaust horrors. Former Swedish Premier Goran Persson
initiated the alliance in 1998. The chair of the International Holocaust
Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) is set to pass Tuesday to Germany for one year,
with the aim of countering acts and perpetrators of Holocaust denial and
falsification. Germany's assumption of the IHRA chair from Luxembourg — at an
evening ceremony in Berlin — will overlap in July with Germany assuming the
six-month presidency of the EU Council of Ministers. Two IHRA assemblies are
planned this year in Germany: one in Berlin in June, and the second in Leipzig
in November, with a focus on creating a "Global Task Force against
Holocaust falsification." Heading Germany's IHRA team is ambassador
Michaela Küchler, who is the German Foreign Office's special commissioner for
relations with Jewish organizations. Since 2008, the IHRA's permanent office is
located in Berlin.
Germany bears 'special
responsibility': The Central Council
of Jews in Germany said the post-war Federal Republic of Germany bore
"special responsibility" in the battle against "forgetting"
the murder of six million Jews under the 12-year Nazi Hitler regime that was
defeated in 1945. The council also welcomed the intention of Chancellor Angela
Merkel's coalition government to promote definition updates, help evolve IHRA
teaching materials, and make anti-Semitism a more severe crime. Küchler said
the aim was to "do more" in defining Holocaust denial and
falsification as well as anti-Semitism, adopted by 19 IHRA members in 2013 and
2016. Paragraph 130 of Germany's Penal Code already makes Holocaust denial
punishable with up to five years' imprisonment. Similar laws exist in 18 other
European nations. The agenda of the 34-nation IHRA — comprising mostly of EU
nations (but excluding Malta and Cyprus), as well as the US, Canada, Argentina,
Australia, Britain and Switzerland — also includes antiziganism, or hostility
towards Sinti and Roma, and an early warning system for potential future
genocides. Persson's 1998 initiative resulted in the Stockholm Declaration of
2000 that stressed the singularity or exceptional character of the Holocaust;
obligations to educate younger generations; and to ensure a future "world
without genocide." In the past, critics of Germany's adoption of the IHRA
definition had asserted that it potentially blurred the line between
anti-Semitism, so defined, and criticism of Israel.
'Parade of hate and intolerance': Among 50 heads of state who in late-January
attended Israel's Yad Vashem remembrance of the 1945 liberation of the
Auschwitz death camp by Soviet troops, French President Emmanuel Macron slammed
the resurgence of anti-Semitism worldwide, calling it a "parade of hate
and intolerance." Israeli President Reuven Rivlin urged the world to adopt
the IHRA's updated definitions, describing anti-Semitism as a
"chronic" scourge from the political right and left that throughout
history had taken on various guises. Chairing a German integration summit in
Berlin Monday, 12 days after racist shooting attacks in Hanau, Chancellor
Merkel said the country's fight against racism, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia
was a matter of "deepest concern" for her grand coalition government
— which has been in office since early 2018.
^ It does seem odd to give the
leadership of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance to Germany when
you consider that 2020 is both the 75th Anniversary of the end of
World War 2 and the Holocaust as well as the rise of Anti-Semitism attacks
within Germany. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-assumes-chair-of-anti-semitism-alliance/a-52620401
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